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Corina, David; Singleton, Jenny – Child Development, 2009
The condition of deafness presents a developmental context that provides insight into the biological, cultural, and linguistic factors underlying the development of neural systems that impact social cognition. Studies of visual attention, behavioral regulation, language development, and face and human action perception are discussed. Visually…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Linguistics, Deafness, Caregivers
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Mehta, Mitul A.; Golembo, Nicole I.; Nosarti, Chiara; Colvert, Emma; Mota, Ashley; Williams, Steven C. R.; Rutter, Michael; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J. S. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2009
The adoption into the UK of children who have been reared in severely deprived conditions provides an opportunity to study possible association between very early negative experiences and subsequent brain development. This cross-sectional study was a pilot for a planned larger study quantifying the effects of early deprivation on later brain…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries, Brain, Cognitive Processes
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Varela, R. Enrique; Hensley-Maloney, Lauren – Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 2009
This article reviews the literature on how culture influences anxiety in Latino youth. First, a review of cross-cultural variations in prevalence and measurement is presented. Then, the article focuses on how culture impacts the meaning and expression of anxiety. Specifically, we discuss the meaning and expression of anxiety, the impact of culture…
Descriptors: Children, Cultural Differences, Cognitive Processes, Anxiety
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Simpkins, Sandra D.; Bouffard, Suzanne M.; Dearing, Eric; Kreider, Holly; Wimer, Chris; Caronongan, Pia; Weiss, Heather B. – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 2009
In this study, we identified unique clusters of parenting behaviors based on parents' school involvement, community involvement, rule-setting, and cognitive stimulation with data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics-Child Development Supplement. In early (n = 668) and middle adolescence (n = 634), parents who provided high cognitive stimulation…
Descriptors: Family Income, Adolescents, Child Development, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Topping, Keith J. – Theory Into Practice, 2009
Peer assessment is an arrangement for learners to consider and specify the level, value, or quality of a product or performance of other equal-status learners. Products to be assessed can include writing, oral presentations, portfolios, test performance, or other skilled behaviors. Peer assessment can be summative or formative. A formative view is…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Peer Evaluation, Teaching Methods, Evaluation Methods
Stephens, Karen – Exchange: The Early Childhood Leaders' Magazine Since 1978, 2009
At a brisk pace, research findings focused on children's play are finally reaching the light of day in popular media. No longer left sitting in archives of academic journals, the benefits of play to lifelong success have been touted in radio, television, magazines, and newspapers. It gives early childhood professionals a powerful, credible…
Descriptors: Play, Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Cognitive Development
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Assouline, Susan G.; Nicpon, Megan Foley; Doobay, Alissa – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2009
A case study of the psychometric characteristics of two profoundly gifted girls, one with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and the other without ASD, is used to describe the nuances and subtleties most relevant in understanding the relationship between extreme giftedness and social difficulties. Through the presentation of the results from…
Descriptors: Gifted, Autism, Adjustment (to Environment), Psychometrics
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Gomez, Juan-Carlos – Child Development, 2007
This article presents a tentatively "balanced" view (i.e., midway between lean and rich interpretations) of pointing behavior in infants and apes, based upon the notion of intentional reading of behavior without simultaneous attribution of unobservable mental states. This can account for the complexity of infant pointing without attributing…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Development, Primatology, Nonverbal Communication
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Mundy, Peter; Block, Jessica; Delgado, Christine; Pomares, Yuly; Van Hecke, Amy Vaughan; Parlade, Meaghan Venezia – Child Development, 2007
This study examined the development of joint attention in 95 infants assessed between 9 and 18 months of age. Infants displayed significant test-retest reliability on measures of following gaze and gestures (responding to joint attention, RJA) and in their use of eye contact to establish social attention coordination (initiating joint attention,…
Descriptors: Infants, Attention, Nonverbal Communication, Cognitive Development
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Johnson, Susan C.; Shimizu, Y. Alpha; Ok, Su-Jeong – Cognitive Development, 2007
Twelve-month-old infants attribute goals to both familiar, human agents and unfamiliar, non-human agents. They also attribute goal-directedness to both familiar actions and unfamiliar ones. Four conditions examined information 12-month-olds use to determine which actions of an unfamiliar agent are goal-directed. Infants who witnessed the agent…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Development, Goal Orientation, Role
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Setti, Annalisa; Caramelli, Nicoletta – Cognitive Development, 2007
The present study concerns redundant data problems, defined as problems in which irrelevant data is provided. This type of problem provides a misleading context [Pascual-Leone, J. (1987). Organismic process for neo-Piagetian theories: A dialectical causal account of cognitive development. "International Journal of Psychology," 22, 531-570] similar…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Inhibition, Cognitive Development, Redundancy
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Nguyen, Simone P. – Developmental Psychology, 2007
Items commonly belong to many categories. Cross-classification is the classification of a single item into more than one category. This research explored 2- to 6-year-old children's use of 2 different category systems for cross-classification: script (e.g., school-time items, birthday party items) and taxonomic (e.g., animals, clothes). The…
Descriptors: Classification, Young Children, Child Development, Cognitive Development
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van der Maas, Han L. J.; Quinlan, Philip T.; Jansen, Brenda R. J. – Cognition, 2007
In contrast to Shultz and Takane [Shultz, T.R., & Takane, Y. (2007). Rule following and rule use in the balance-scale task. "Cognition", in press, doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2006.12.004.] we do not accept that the traditional Rule Assessment Method (RAM) of scoring responses on the balance scale task has advantages over latent class analysis (LCA):…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Small Classes, Cognitive Development, Models
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Kalish, Charles W. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2007
Categorization judgments may be right or wrong and more or less useful. When a child calls a whale "a fish," is she making an error, or just describing an interesting similarity? This chapter explores the challenges children face in learning to conform to conventions governing categorization. (Contains 1 figure.)
Descriptors: Classification, Pragmatics, Semantics, Children
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Hoffmann, Michael H. G. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2007
Starting from the observation that small children can count more objects than numbers--a phenomenon that I am calling the "lifeworld dependency of cognition"--and an analysis of finger calculation, the paper shows how learning can be explained as the development of cognitive systems. Parts of those systems are not only an individual's different…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Ability, Semiotics, Learning Theories
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